GM Maurice Ashley is launching yet another initiative. This time it will be in his home country of Jamaica. In a couple of weeks, he will host the 1st Jamaica International Chess Festival. It will feature a number of activities including a tournament with American scholastic stars.

The Caribbean seems to be a rite-of-passage for many scholastic players given the close proximity. American star Hikaru Nakamura first cut his teeth in Trinidad as a 10-year old and other junior players have enjoyed places like Bermuda and Curacao. This tournament will feature a couple of phenoms in GMs Awonder Liang and Akshat Chanda along with FM Akshita Gorti, girls junior champion. Canada’s 2016 women’s champion FM Qiyu Zhou will also be part of the contingent making an appearance as well.

There will be a variety of activities including school visits, seminars and simuls (featuring the four young masters). On the last day, the team event will feature the four phenoms in a 4-round rapid team match.

“So the Festival is about empowerment: Empowering by expanding the envelope of the possible. We are broadening the reach of Chess in Jamaica, promoting the game in a fun-filled atmosphere, while inspiring existing players to higher levels of achievement.”

~Ambassador Nigel Clarke

The event is the brainchild of Ashley and Nigel Clarke, who served as Jamaica’s Ambassador of Economic Affairs. Clarke is a “Chess Dad” and took his children to the 2015 World Youth Chess Championship where he met Liang and his father. However, the idea gained momentum when he visited the Sinquefield Cup last year and discussed the project with Ashley. Clarke also serves as one of the Vice Presidents of Jamaica Chess Federation.

While the project lies outside the auspices of the JCF, the entire chess community has provided support. According to Clarke, members of the JCF Council (IA Robert Wheeler, NM Peter Myers) will serve as arbiters for the team event. JCF President Ian Wilkinson and FM Warren Elliott will served as volunteers for the festival. Ashley will also lend his world famous commentating skills.

A lovely summary, written by WGM Qiyu Zhou, of the Jamaica International Chess Festival weekend that took place last weekend, Oct 13 – 15, 2017. The Festival was a resounding success, and we look forward to many positive spin off effects from this event for the Jamaican chess community.http://en.chessbase.com/post/first-jamaica-international-festival

The inaugural Jamaican International Chess Festival kicked off on the 13th with a serious schedule of events. The weekend was filled with many activities certain to ignite the chess scene in Jamaica for many years to come. GM Maurice Ashley teamed with Ambassador Dr. Nigel Clarke to produce and host the event. As with any new initiative, a web of relationships were established over time to make it happen. It begin with the idea of starting a center at Seaward Gardens in Olympic Gardens. Prime Minister Andrew Holness told the Jamaica Gleaner,

Actually, that came from a meeting I had in 2010, thereabouts, with Ian Wilkinson (Jamaica Chess Federation President), who was then spearheading a programme to spread chess throughout the island, starting with the schools. I had made a commitment at that time that I would spend some resources to create a centre at the Seaward All-Age School. But then it blossomed, having spoken to (Grandmaster) Maurice (Ashley), a former resident of Olympic Gardens, who has done amazingly well. Then I asked Ambassador Nigel Clarke (JCF vice-president) to coordinate with Maurice, and that blossomed into a bigger movement, to kind of get chess a new energy, to spread it in Jamaica. The centre at Seaward is only but just one of what we plan to do. (full article)

Four young masters were flown in to partake in the festivities including GMs Awonder Liang and Akshat Chandra and WGM Qiyu Zhou and WIM Akshita Gorti. These players are well-traveled having competed worldwide in youth tournaments during their rise to stardom. Liang is currently the world’s youngest Grandmaster while Chandra’s rapid ascent to GM has become legendary. According from Tournament Director Frank Johnson, Chandra has one of the fastest times for achieving the GM title. Only five years ago, his rating stood in the 1500s.

Zhou, who represents Canada, has an interesting background. The 17-year old is the only one of the four who has represented the national team having won the women’s championship in 2016. Despite being of Chinese ancestry, she spent her first few years in France where she learned to play. Her family them moved to Finland where she won the under-10 Finnish championship five consecutive years. Her family then moved to Canada where she excelled at the youth level and then won the under-14 world championship in 2014.

The 14-year old Gorti is one of the many young girls dotting the top section is American open tournaments. Starting chess at age seven, she won a number of titles including the under-8 North American Youth. She is currently the highest-rated girl under-14 and won the 2017 U.S. Junior Girls Championship and competed in the U.S. Women’s Championship.

So a high-powered lineup would come to the land of “wood and water” engage with the chess community. The excitement was at a fever pitch. The young masters started with visits to local schools with Liang and Zhou visiting Wolmer’s Boys’ School and Chandra and Gorti visited St. Catherine’s. They would play simultaneous exhibitions to waiting and eager students.

Awonder and Qiyu at Wolmer’s Boys with GM Ashley, former Wolmer studentPhoto by Changrong Yu

In the evening was an extravaganza with an introduction of the players and an evening of social interaction with guest players and the larger chess community. There was so much excitement building up as the players mingled. There were lots of casual blitz games being played. The highlight of the evening was the appearance of the Prime Minister, Andrew Holness.

His Excellency actually played competitive chess for St. Catherine High School and later while a student at the University of the West Indies (UWI). The idea of this initiative is to use chess as a means for social intervention. JCF President Ian Wilkinson has been charting an ambitious course across the island and was on hand to support the event.

David MacEnulty (far left) joins the players and the organizers during the chess seminar

Frank Johnson shaking hands with Ian Wilkinson. Past JCF President Frederick Cameron is in the background.

National Master Akeem Brown playing friendly blitz with Canadian WGM Qiyu ZhouPhotos by Frank Johnson

After an eventful day, the guests would conduct more educational visits and take a tour to visit landmarks around Jamaica. One must-see in Jamaica is the Bob Marley Museum. It was actually the house that Marley lived in. Part of the lure of the tour is the simplicity in which Marley lived. Despite being a pioneer in a music form that would sweep the world, his fame did not change his perspective. Unfortunately, Jamaica was heavily steeped in bitter political battles that often turned violent.

In his house are the bullet holes from an assassination attempt. Marley was injured and many feared he would have to cancel a scheduled concert two days later, but he refused and gave an inspiring performance. “The people who are trying to make this world worse aren’t taking a day off. How can I?” he stated.

Bob Marley and the Wailers

Frank posing with the legend

My favourite part of the Jamaican International Chess Festival was surely the night at Emancipation Park. From human chess, and continuous blitz, to the simul, the crowd (and us) were in for a treat.

~Qiyu Zhou

Now the fun began! Qiyu described the scene as electric in Emancipation Parkin her ChessBase article. Several videos attest to this assertion as she stated crowds had to be contained. This was chess and not boxing! There was a human chess game that was of course very interactive. Each participant was given a red or gold jersey with the name of the piece.

Photos by Frank Johnson

As if there were not enough activities, there were stations where anyone could learn how to play chess. Local masters were on hand to provide the basic instructions. It was wonderful to see this process as it would become a trivia question in one’s chess life. “Where did you learn how to play?” will be answered, “at the Jamaica Chess Festival.” Certainly, a historic marker for the community as well. There were vendors selling chess merchandise and booths by SMART Chess and the Jamaica Chess Federation.

Learn chess…

…from one of the local masters! National Master Ryan Blackwood shows rook movement.

Scavenger Hunt

Drone footage and photos by Jamaica Chess Festival

There followed blitz battles with the four masters and GM Ashley taking on 44 local players. The five masters ceded only one loss… National Master Joshua Christie getting a win against Akshita. The tandem simultaneous exhibition would feature the five masters against 76 players. Awonder had 16 while the other four had 15. In the end, the masters would drop one game with Awonder blundering mate against veteran master Geoffrey Byfield.

With FM Warren Elliott and NM Mikhail Solomon belting out commentary and trivia, the crowd was buzzing with excitement. It is about as vibrant a chess scene as one could hope for. For an island with a population of about 2.9 million, a good portion were aware that chess was grabbing headline news that weekend. GM Ashley was as excited as we’ve ever seen him. Get a taste of the action in the following videos!

Videos by Jamaica International Chess Festival

What a night! Frank Johnson told The Chess Drum that “activities went all night.” In a place that is known for the parties until the wee hours of the morning, it is no surprise that the energy continued to flow with the pulse of the booming music. Jamaicans know how to throw a party. Nevertheless, it was time to get ready for the next day… and the grand finale.

For those who are not familiar with Emancipation Park, it is an iconic place and a social center of Kingston since 2002. It had met controversy because of the two imposing 7-foot statues representing the indigenous people of the island. Both are completely naked and anatomically-endowed as the symbol of freedom, aptly named after Marley’s “Redemption Song.”

On the final day, crowds had begun to gather for the final events. The marquee event was the team rapid event. Two teams (Dark Knights and Raging Rooks) consisting of 11 players would face off in a four-game match. Each player would play their opponent four times with 25 minutes plus five seconds added per move. JCF President Wilkinson gave his blessings and would join GM Ashley and FM Elliott in the commentator’s booth. Let the games begin!

JCF President Ian Wilkinson making way for the event with his usual panache and in an eloquent style.
Photos by Jamaica Chess Festival

The event appeared to be a rousing success and the excitement has increased immeasurably with support of the government, the Jamaican Chess Federation and local players. It is a matter of time before the island begin hosting elite events. As Qiyu Zhou pointed out in her article, Jamaica offers ideal conditions for a vacation with its beautiful scenery and the hosts are certainly experts in the tourism industry. Hopefully, the Jamaican Chess Festival will become a fixture on the island’s chess landscape.

Thanks to the young masters for their presence and inspiration and to the organizers and supporters who made this wonderful event possible. Until year…